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STILL STREAMED: HOW HIGH IMPACT DECISIONS ARE SHAPING STUDENTS’ FUTURES
ABOUT SOCIAL PLANNING TORONTO
Social Planning Toronto is a non-profit, charitable community organization
that works to improve equity, social justice and quality of life in Toronto
through community capacity building, community education and advocacy,
policy research and analysis, and social reporting.
Social Planning Toronto is committed to building a “Civic Society” one in
which diversity, equity, social and economic justice, interdependence and
active civic participation are central to all aspects of our lives - in our families,
neighbourhoods, voluntary and recreational activities and in our politics.
To find this report and learn more about Social Planning Toronto, visit
http://socialplanningtoronto.org.
STILL STREAMED:
HOW HIGH IMPACT DECISIONS ARE SHAPING STUDENTS’ FUTURES
© Social Planning Toronto
ISBN: 978-1894-199-40-7
Published in Toronto
by Social Planning Toronto
2 Carlton St. Suite 1001
Toronto, ON M5B 1J3
REPORT LAYOUT AND DESIGN
Ravi Joshi and Carl Carganilla
This report was proudly produced with unionized labour.
SOCIAL PLANNING TORONTO | 1
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
REPORT AUTHORS
Sharma Queiser, Social Planning Toronto
Sabrina De Araujo, Social Planning Toronto
RESEARCH SUPPORT
Anteneh Gedamu, Social Planning Toronto
Ramla Abukar, Peer Researcher
Andre Harriott, Peer Researcher
Fitriya Mohamed Hussein, Peer Researcher
Ascia Ibrahim, Peer Researcher
Kofi Kumi, Peer Researcher
Tameka Messam, Peer Researcher
RESEARCH ADVISORY COMMITTEE – COALITION FOR ALTERNATIVES TO STREAMING IN EDUCATION (CASE)
Joseph Amankrah, Camara Skills Training Network
& Ryerson University
Alexandra Arraiz, Working Women Community
Centre
Cutty Duncan, ANC Mount Dennis/Social Planning
Toronto
Diana Grimaldos, Working Women Community
Centre
George Martin
Winston Tinglin
Marjolein Winterink
SPECIAL THANKS TO
All the people who helped to promote and recruit
participants for this study
All the students and parents who shared their
experiences
We also wish to extend our gratitude to the City
of Toronto and the United Way Toronto and
York Region for their continued funding and
ongoing support of Social Planning Toronto, and
the Ontario Trillium Foundation for funding this
project
An agency of the Government of OntarioUn organisme du gouvernement de l’Ontario
2 | STILL STREAMED: HOW HIGH IMPACT DECISIONS ARE SHAPING STUDENTS’ FUTURES
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
BACKGROUND
Across Ontario, grade 8 students are required
to register for high school courses which are
classified into three levels: academic, applied, and
locally developed/essentials. Typically, students
take the majority of their courses at the same
level, constituting a stream or pathway. Not only
do these decisions impact students’ educational
pathways through high school, they can have
significant bearing on their post-secondary and
career options.
While our education system strives to level the
playing field for marginalized students, children
of colour and lower income students are over-
represented in lower streams which can limit their
future opportunities and may not reflect their
goals or potential.
RESEARCH STUDY
While much research has been done on
streaming, students’ and parents’ perspectives
and experiences have not been widely captured.
This study was designed to fill this gap by
documenting families’ lived experiences of the
course selection process in a high-need, urban
neighbourhood. To better understand how
streaming practices surfaced in the everyday
experiences of families, this study explored the
processes and influences affecting high school
course selection. A total of 52 in-depth interviews
were conducted with students and parents in the
greater Weston-Mount Dennis area in Toronto.
FINDINGS AND ANALYSIS
Grade 8 may be too early to make such
an important decision that will have long-
term consequences. Many students felt they
didn’t have the maturity in grade 8 to make
these decisions and could have used more
individualized support when making these choices
for the first time. While guidance counsellors
would appear to be the most appropriate source
for this, few schools currently have the capacity to
accommodate this.
Factors in decision making are complex.
Students’ choices were shaped by numerous
different and sometimes contradictory factors
when selecting their courses for high school.
This included the amount and type of classroom
opportunities and support available, as well as
their interests, abilities, future aspirations, and
self-perception. To varying degrees, they also
consulted with their family, teachers, and peers
but often expressed a need for added support
during this process.
Students and parents navigate a patchwork
of information about course selection.
Students in this neighbourhood understood the
“applied” pathway to be the mainstream pathway
but shared no consistent understanding of the
difference between applied and academic level
courses. Since parents reported accessing most
information through their child, this would also
impact the information they receive.
SOCIAL PLANNING TORONTO | 3
Both parents and students alike expressed the
need for more information and/or one-on-one
support during the course selection process that
responds to individual circumstances. To facilitate
this, engagement and communication strategies
need to reflect the diverse communities being
served.
Placement reflects past performance and
may restrict future growth. Most students
believed that placement in applied or academic
levels courses is based on achievement levels and
therefore students could move up to a higher
level if they exerted enough effort. However, for
those students who actively tried to make an
upward transition, mandatory transfer courses
deterred or prevented them. As a result, once
students chose their courses in grade 9, they were
on a path that was difficult to change and which
impacted their future post-secondary and career
options.
Encouragement and one-on-one support
makes a difference. Students valued teachers
who they had a personal relationship with
and would sometimes seek advice from these
teachers regarding their course selection.
However, the informal nature of this role suggests
that it may not be a reliable tool unless teachers
are supported, trained, and allocated time
specifically for this purpose. Further effort should
be made to systematize connections between
guidance counsellors and students.
CONCLUSION AND RECOMMENDATIONS
Despite provincial claims that streaming has
been abolished, quantitative data demonstrates
that students are organized into structured
pathways which significantly impact their access
to post-secondary and career opportunities.
This is especially detrimental to low-income and
marginalized students who are over-represented
in lower level courses. Without the maturity
and support to fully grasp the weight of these
decisions, some students are unknowingly
following a path which inhibits them from
reaching their full potential.
Findings from this research indicate some key
considerations to improve the course selection
and streaming processes in Ontario. This will
require making de-streaming policies currently in
place more effective by reviewing the practices
identified in this report and developing a plan
to alter the current process, including delaying
any selection of education pathways as late in a
students’ education as possible.
The complete list of recommendations is included
on page 33.
4 | STILL STREAMED: HOW HIGH IMPACT DECISIONS ARE SHAPING STUDENTS’ FUTURES
INTRODUCTION
Today high schools face unprecedented
challenges in preparing young people for
adulthood, a rapidly changing workforce, and
lifelong learning. As our education system
endeavors to set young people on the path to
lead fulfilling and meaningful lives, graduates
must also be ready for a future that may
include multiple careers, a non-linear path, and
employment in jobs that do not currently exist.1
At the same time, the public education system
has a central responsibility to level the playing
field for students who face marginalization and
disadvantage. All students should have access
to the learning opportunities and resources
they need, as well as challenging, high-quality
curriculum, and chances to explore and develop
their individual interests. Further, barriers that
prevent students from obtaining a high level of
success and achieving their full potential should
be removed.
1 Peterson & Hamlin, 2017; Gordon, 2017.2 Clandfield et al, 2014.3 ibid.
However, underlying inequities persist and impact
the type and quality of education that some
students receive. Specifically, high school students
from marginalized groups are far more likely to
be enrolled in non-academic courses which do
not necessarily match their potential, interests,
and future career goals.2 With lower expectations,
more limited opportunities to learn, and fewer
post-secondary options, this practice of academic
streaming perpetuates existing social hierarchies
and inequities.3
These patterns persevere despite the introduction
of provincial policy more than 15 years ago that
was intended to end streaming in secondary
schools.
SOCIAL PLANNING TORONTO | 5
STREAMING IN SECONDARY SCHOOLS
BACKGROUND AND CONTEXT
Streaming, also known as tracking, is the
practice of grouping students into courses based
on perceived ability and/or presumed post-
secondary destination. As an organizational
practice, streaming is claimed to facilitate
teaching as it allows teachers to tailor classes
according to the ability level of their students and
consequently increase learning opportunities.4
However, contrary to its objectives, some
literature suggests that separating students
by ability level can have significant, and often
adverse, consequences for students’ academic,
social, psychological and economic future.5 Since
the literature also indicates that the groupings
students are assigned to may not strongly reflect
students’ capacities or goals,6 there is good
reason to be concerned about this practice and its
impacts.
PROVINCIAL POLICY
Prior to 1999, Ontario students were streamed
into three different pathways starting in grade 9:
basic, general, and advanced. These three tracks
prepared students for certain post-secondary
destinations: workplace, apprenticeship or
4 Hallinan, 1994.5 Gamoran, 1992; Hallinan, 1994; Brunello & Checchi, 2007.6 Clandfield et al., 2014; Hamlin & Cameron, 2015.7 Curtis, Livingstone & Smaller, 1992.8 People for Education, 2014.9 Ontario Ministry of Education and Training, 1999, p.13.
college, and university respectively. This historic
practice of ability grouping was publicly criticized
for perpetuating disadvantage and maintaining
privilege: students from low-income households
were disproportionately enrolled in lower streams
and students from high-income households were
over-represented in higher streams.7 While new
policy introduced in 1999, Ontario Secondary
Schools, Grades 9-12: Program and Diploma
Requirements, 1999 (OSS:99), formally eliminated
overt streaming, the practice of separating
students into academic and non-academic
pathways continues to occur in Ontario secondary
schools today.8
The OSS:99 policy called for uniformly rigorous
criteria and high flexibility in allowing students
to mix non-academic (applied and essentials)
and academic courses. This structure promised
to provide “a graduated streaming of courses in
Grades 9 to 12 that will keep options open for
all students in the earlier grades and prepare
students in senior grades for their future
destinations”.9
However, as discussed below, research shows
that despite these changes, students are often
placed within structured pathways which unfairly
disadvantage those from marginalized and low-
income households.
6 | STILL STREAMED: HOW HIGH IMPACT DECISIONS ARE SHAPING STUDENTS’ FUTURES
PROGRAMS OF STUDY
The latest streaming structure in Ontario requires
students to choose courses that are classified
as academic, applied, and locally developed/
essentials in grades 9 and 10. In grades 11
and 12, students then choose courses that are
categorized as university, university/college,
college, or workplace, which prepare them for
post-secondary opportunities accordingly. The
courses a student takes in grades 9 and 10 affect
the options they can choose from in grades
11 and 12. Open courses are optional courses
available at all grade levels and serve to foster
students’ skills and knowledge in a subject area.
They are accessible to all students and are not
designed with any particular post-secondary
destination in mind.10
Students tend to take the majority of their
courses at the same level. This constitutes a
stream or track, also sometimes referred to as a
pathway or program of study. Very few students
transfer between levels. In a recent Ontario-wide
survey, 91% of principals reported that students
“never” or “not very often” transfer from applied
to academic level courses.11
10 Toronto District School Board, 2016.11 People for Education, 2013.12 Parekh, 2013.13 Toronto District School Board, 2013.14 Parekh, 2014.15 Parekh, 2013.16 ibid.
These pathways remain consistent throughout
the senior years of high school. According to data
from the Toronto District School Board (TDSB):
• 90.2% of students who took university level
courses had been in the academic pathway
for Grades 9-10; and
• 74.9% of students who took college level
courses had been in the applied pathway for
Grades 9-10.12
ELEMENTARY SCHOOL ACHIEVEMENT
Throughout elementary school, student’s level
of achievement influences how they move
from one grade to the next. Students can make
these transitions in one of two ways: either
by “promotion” or “transfer”.13 Students are
promoted when they have met the curriculum
expectations across all subjects. Since policies
restrict schools from keeping students within their
current grade for a second year,14 students who
have not met the curriculum standards are almost
always transferred to the next grade. Whether a
student is transferred or promoted to grade 9 is
a strong indicator of their pathway through high
school. Particularly, students who are promoted
from grade 8 to grade 9 are far more prevalent
in academic courses (93%), as compared to
applied (43.4%) and essentials (3.3%) courses.15
Those who had been transferred, are far fewer
in the academic stream (4.5%), but make up the
majority of students in the applied (53.5%) and
the essentials (91.4%) pathways.16
SOCIAL PLANNING TORONTO | 7
LITERATURE ON STREAMING AND ITS CONSEQUENCES
Students’ life opportunities are influenced by the pathway they take in high school. In Ontario, these decisions are made by the beginning of grade 9, when children are 13 and 14 years old, and are typically based on their overall academic achievement up to that point. Accordingly, streaming processes and students’ experiences throughout elementary school can have significant bearing on students’ pathways in high school.17
RACE, CLASS, AND SOCIAL MOBILITY
Scholars, education professionals, and stakeholders have critiqued streaming for maintaining achievements gaps and inequality. Students in the low and middle streams are held to lower standards and, as a result, their educational experience suffers and their social mobility is limited.18 Research shows that schools with students of diverse races and social statuses tend to recreate social hierarchies within the school system by over-placing students of colour and low-income students in lower streams. Specifically, self-identified Black and Aboriginal students are over-represented in the applied and essentials pathways, while self-identified East Asian and South Asian students are over-represented in the academic pathway.19
17 Clandfield et al., 2014.18 Burris & Welner, 2005; Gamoran, 1992; Wells & Oakes, 1996; Brunello & Checchi, 2007.19 Parekh, 2013.20 Parekh, 2013; Clandfield et al., 2014.21 Brunello & Checchi, 2007.22 Parekh, 2013; Zeman, 2007.23 Parekh, 2013.
Students in non-academic streams are also
more likely to come from lower income families
as compared to those enrolled in academic
streams.20
Streaming contributes to racial and class-based
imbalance by limiting social and economic
mobility of certain groups.21 Lack of access to
post-secondary opportunities for racialized and
low-income students who are over-represented
in non-academic streams reproduces systemic
biases and maintains current social inequities.
Students who graduate from non-academic
streams are less likely to graduate within
four years and are less likely to apply for
postsecondary education.22 Even though the
applied pathway is considered preparation for
college, the majority of students who accept
an offer to college take either university or
university/college courses in grade 12.23
The education system in Ontario is valued as a
means of breaking the cycle of poverty. However,
the over-placement of marginalized students
into lower streams limits their life chances,
ability to reach their full potential, and escape
intergenerational disadvantage.
8 | STILL STREAMED: HOW HIGH IMPACT DECISIONS ARE SHAPING STUDENTS’ FUTURES
TEACHER EXPECTATIONS AND ACADEMIC PERFORMANCE
Teachers’ expectations are a key contributor
to student success. Research shows that
students tend to perform according to teachers’
expectations and, additionally, students’
performances are closely associated with the
quality of relationships they have with teachers.24
While generally teachers are supportive of
students’ futures, some studies show teachers
may be less supportive towards “low-achieving”
students.25 Though concerned about students’
learning, teachers may feel less optimistic
about their futures and adjust their teaching
styles in response. Sorhagen (2013) found that
early teacher expectations influence academic
achievement in high school, especially for low-
income and minority students, and suggests that
it is the result of self-fulfilling prophecies in the
classroom. Teacher support, or lack of support,
can also influence students’ interest in a subject
and students’ self-efficacy.26
24 Segedin, 2012.25 ibid.26 Yu & Singh, 2016.27 Rubin, 2006.28 Rubin, 2006; Oakes, Wells, Jones & Datnow, 1997.29 ibid.30 Rubin, 2006.31 People for Education, 2014.
DE-STREAMING PRACTICES
De-streaming is a process in which streaming
practices are dismantled and students are placed
in mixed ability, or heterogeneous, classes.27
Research suggests the most successful examples
of de-streaming initiatives include reform at the
instructional, institutional, and ideological levels.28
As students are placed in heterogenous classes,
instructional practices are altered to respond
(i.e. through differentiated instruction). De-
streaming initiatives also need to engage with the
underlying belief systems of students, teachers,
and the community. Through these efforts,
conventional conceptions of intelligence as being
fixed are deconstructed and all students are
viewed as capable and able to define their own
futures. Importantly, teachers view themselves
as powerful agents in students’ learning.29 De-
streaming practices ensure that all students
have access to high-quality curriculum, teachers,
and resources, no matter their social location or
perceived ability.30
Countries such as Poland offer mixed ability
classes and have made impressive achievement
in the past decade with this strategy. By delaying
streaming for an extra year, the percentage of
high math performers increased from 10% to 17%
and low math performing students decreased
from 22% to 14% in less than a decade.31
SOCIAL PLANNING TORONTO | 9
In Ontario, Granite Ridge Education Centre, a
small school serving children in kindergarten
to grade 12, has also seen great promise in the
introduction of mixed math courses: teachers
reported improved behaviour, performance,
and time on task.32 The Toronto District School
Board has too been piloting initiatives where
academic courses are offered instead of applied
curricula.33 These pilots have had very positive
results. For example, C.W. Jefferys Collegiate
Institute piloted an Academic grade 9 Africentric
English course. A total of 56 students took the
course, 23 of whom had selected grade 9 applied
English on their course selection sheet. Fifty-four
of the 56 students achieved academic curriculum
standards.34 A collaborative inquiry of this and
other pilot programs at the TDSB led authors
to their main recommendation: phase out
streaming.35
For almost three decades de-streaming
practices have been promoted by the public,
debated by decision makers, and even piloted
by school boards.36 People for Education and
the Organization for Economic Cooperation
and Development (OECD) advocate for delaying
streaming practices until later grades. The existing
literature suggests that delaying streaming allows
students more time to identify their needs and
aspirations and seek suitable strategies to achieve
their future goals.
32 Hamlin & Cameron, 2015.33 San Vicente, Sultana & Seck, 2015.34 ibid.35 ibid.36 Clandfield et al., 2014.37 ibid.
RESEARCH PURPOSE
While streaming can take many forms, from
different types of schools to differential treatment
of students,37 this research study focused on
the formal and informal streaming of secondary
students into different pathways. Given the
systemic, unobtrusive, and nuanced nature of
current streaming processes, this research study
explored the lived experiences of parents and
students in selecting courses for high school. The
study identifies some of the practical mechanisms
by which the process continues to impact student
outcomes, an area currently lacking in literature
on streaming. Much of the previous research
has focused on how socioeconomic positions
influences students’ opportunities without
offering much insight on families’ individual
capacities to maneuver and change these
processes.
We sought to gauge students’ and parents’ level
of support for and knowledge of course selection
and better understand what factors influence
these decisions. With a focus on residents in the
Weston-Mount Dennis area, this study highlighted
the experiences of racialized and low-income
residents in underserviced areas.
10 | STILL STREAMED: HOW HIGH IMPACT DECISIONS ARE SHAPING STUDENTS’ FUTURES
METHODS
This research project was a community-based
initiative which strove to include youth and
community input in all stages of the research
process.
The Coalition for Alternatives to Streaming in
Education (CASE) provided community advisory
support for this project. CASE is a group of
Toronto-based organizations, community groups,
and individuals committed to promoting student
success and ending the practice of streaming in
public schools.
Six young people were recruited as peer
researchers for this project. All of the peer
researchers either lived or previously lived in
the York South-Weston area and had attended
public schools. They attended two training
sessions on high school course selection and
community-based research and interview
strategies. Each peer researcher also shadowed
the lead researcher on at least one interview to
develop their skills and ensure continuity among
interviews.
CASE members and the peer researchers helped
to develop the research methods, tools, and
outreach strategies. To unpack the processes
related to streaming this project documented
the lived experiences of parents and students
in selecting high school courses. Two interview
guides were developed which explored the level
of support and knowledge families receive in
making these decisions. These guides also looked
at what factors influence these decisions and how
the process can be improved.
Participants were recruited through community
organizations, word-of-mouth, neighbourhood
advertisements, and social networks. Students,
and parents of students, who took at least one
of their high school courses at the applied level
within the Toronto District School Board (TDSB)
were eligible to participate. Participants either
lived or went to school in the Weston-Mount
Dennis area. Students had to be at least 16
years of age to be eligible to participate without
parental consent. The parent and student
samples are not matching (i.e. parents who
participated were not the parents of the students
who participated).
SOCIAL PLANNING TORONTO | 11
The Weston and Mount Dennis neighbourhoods
were selected because these neighbourhoods
face a number of challenges as outlined in its
designation as Neighbourhood Improvement
Areas (NIA) by the City of Toronto (see City of
Toronto, 2014a and City of Toronto, 2014b
respectively). These neighbourhoods face
inequities in terms of marginalization, low-
income, and rates of high school graduation
and post-secondary completion, among
others. Additionally, through the Action for
Neighbourhood Change - Mount Dennis, residents
from these neighbourhoods identified education
as a key concern and area for improvement.
The peer researchers conducted semi-structured
one-on-one interviews with students and
parents. The interviews were held at community
organizations or in community spaces, such
as a common room in an apartment building.
The interviews varied in length from twenty
minutes to one and a half hours and were audio-
recorded. A total of 52 usable interviews were
conducted; 39 with students and 13 with parents
(See Profiles for demographic information on
these two groups). Each participant received
a cash honorarium and two transit tokens for
participating in an interview.
Following verbatim transcription, interviews were
coded using the qualitative data analysis software,
NVivo10. Themes were first identified by the lead
researcher and then brought to CASE for further
feedback, refinement, and analysis.
Preliminary findings were presented at Social
Planning Toronto’s Education Forum “How
Choices in High School Affect Your Future”
in March 2017. This event was held at the
York Civic Centre and engaged residents in a
discussion on high school course selection, how
their experiences were similar/dissimilar to the
research findings, and how the course selection
process could be improved.
Feedback from that event was used to inform a
more detailed analysis of the findings and the
development of report recommendations.
Fig 1 - Map of the Weston Mount Dennis Area
York
Renforth Drive348
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et
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ighway 27
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DownsviewAirport
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iver
© OpenStreetMap contributors (CC BY-SA)
12 | STILL STREAMED: HOW HIGH IMPACT DECISIONS ARE SHAPING STUDENTS’ FUTURES
PROFILE OF STUDENT PARTICIPANTS
Interviews were conducted with 39 students; 27 males and 12 females. Their ages ranged from 15 to 19,
with the mode being 17 years of age. The students were from all high school grades (9 to 12), with most
them being in grades 11 (36%) and 12 (51%).
Collectively the students were attending 10 different TDSB high schools within and around the Weston-
Mount Dennis area (see Fig. 2).
The students had attended a variety of elementary schools. The most common elementary schools were
Portage Trail Community School, H J Alexander Community School, Brookhaven Public School, Rockcliffe
Middle School, and C R Marchant Middle School. Twenty percent (20%) had attended elementary schools
outside of Canada.
Most the students self-identified as Black (69%); 15% identified as Filipino; and the others identified as
Indonesian, West Indian, or as having multiple ethnic backgrounds. About a quarter (28%) said English
was not their first language and about a third (36%) said they were born outside of Canada.
Runnymede CI
George Harvey CIWeston CI
York Memorial CI
Downsview SS
Other
FIG. 1 - STUDENTS' CURRENT HIGH SCHOOLFig 2 - Students’ Current High School
SOCIAL PLANNING TORONTO | 13
PROFILE OF PARENT PARTICIPANTS
Interviews were conducted with 13 parents; 5 males and 8 females. Collectively, the parents had children
in every grade of high school (9 to 12), as well as having recently graduated or dropped out of school.
About one third had a child in grade 11 and a third had a child in grade 12. One parent had two high
school aged children.
The parents had children who attended a variety of high schools within and outside of the Weston-Mount
Dennis neighbourhood (see Fig. 3).
George Harvey CI
Weston CI
Other
FIG. 2 - CHILD'S CURRENT HIGH SCHOOLFig 3 - Child’s Current High School
14 | STILL STREAMED: HOW HIGH IMPACT DECISIONS ARE SHAPING STUDENTS’ FUTURES
Two-thirds of the parents self-identified as Black; others identified as Chinese, White, Métis or as having
multiple ethnic backgrounds. All of the parents said English was their first language and the majority
(83%) were born in Canada.
Most of the parents had either one (46%) or two (38%) children. The majority of the parents (85%) said
they were not currently married or in a common-law relationship. The parents had various educational
levels (see Fig. 4) and employment statuses (see Fig. 5). Three parents self-identified as living with a
disability.FIG. 3 - PARENTS' HIGHEST LEVEL OF EDUCATION
Some high school, no diploma
High school graduate, diploma or equivalent
Some college credit, no degree
Trade/technical/vocational training
Bachelor's degree
FIG. 4 - PARENTS' EMPLOYMENT STATUS
Employed full time
Employed part time
Out of work and looking
Unable to work
Fig 4 - Parents’ Highest Level of Education
Fig 5 - Parents’ Employment Status
SOCIAL PLANNING TORONTO | 15
STUDY LIMITATIONS
This study recruited participants largely through community organizations and service providers. While the student sample is large enough to provide rich and diverse information, the experiences of the students who are most disengaged from the education system may not have been captured. However, given the challenges that emerged with our sample, we can reasonably conclude that students less engaged in the education system will face even greater barriers. The group is not a random sample and the conclusions derived from the data cannot be extrapolated to specific statistical frequencies. However, the sample does allow researchers to conclude that these issues are real and have significant impact for some students in the TDSB.
Many parents were approached for this study who could not be engaged to participate in an interview. Outreach strategies were modified on several occasions in attempts to overcome engagement barriers (e.g. increasing participant honoraria or allowing interviews to be conducted over the phone rather than in person). Despite these efforts, our target sample size of 30 was not reached for the parent group. This suggests that parents may face multiple barriers to participation and that our findings reflect the views and experiences of those parents who are more readily engaged. Notably, the parent sample also fails to capture the experiences of parents who recently immigrated to Canada and those who do not speak English as their first language.
The challenges encountered in this research project suggest that conventional outreach may
38 Parekh, 2013.
not effective for engaging parents in this topic.
This study was also confined to a relatively small geographical area. While this was an intentional component of the research design aimed to better understanding the experiences racialized and low-income residents in an underserviced neighbourhood, it may have restricted the research. The experiences of residents in other neighbourhoods has not been captured. Students and parents who participated in this research were more likely to be from similar socio-economic backgrounds and may have had similar school experiences as a result. This means that, for example, this research did not capture the experiences of other students who experience marginalization or those in other neighbourhoods.
The relationship between Special Educations Needs and placement in applied and essentials level courses was not explored through this research. Even though research indicates that a significant number of students with Special Education Needs are enrolled in applied and essentials courses,38 this was not a critical factor raised by students or parents and may require additional investigation through future research.
Additionally, this research study did not capture the complexities of the course selection process for those students who enter the TDSB after grade 9, which largely consists of students who are new to Canada. For these students, who did not make up a significant portion of our sample, the course selection process may look different and these intricacies were not reflected in this research.
16 | STILL STREAMED: HOW HIGH IMPACT DECISIONS ARE SHAPING STUDENTS’ FUTURES
RESEARCH FINDINGS AND ANALYSIS
FINDING: GRADE 8 STUDENTS AREN’T ADEQUATELY PREPARED
A strong theme emerging from this research
is that grade 8 students are not adequately
prepared to make important decisions that will
have long-term consequences.
A few students were concerned that some
elementary students are transferred to the next
grade level without achieving the curriculum
expectations for their current grade. They were
worried that this practice left some students
unprepared for the rigor required in high school.
They emphasized the importance of elementary
school on equipping children with the knowledge,
habits, and skills needed to succeed in high
school. Others mentioned that the level of
achievement a student has in grade 8 heavily
influences the pathway they take in high school
which, in turn, influences their access to post-
secondary and labour market opportunities.
In addition, many students said they could have
used more or better support in grade 8 when
they were choosing high school courses for the
first time. A number of students described going
through a stage of personal growth during high
school. They spoke about how they did not care
very much about school in grades 8 and 9, did
not want to put effort into school, and had poor
attendance. However, as they got older their
priorities changed and they took school matters
more seriously. Some now felt they were playing
catch-up and others felt they were on the wrong
path all together.
A few parents also recognized that grade 8
was quite early to be making these decisions
and proposed some ways to remedy this. One
suggested increasing the level of parental
involvement when these decisions are being
made in grades 8, 9, and 10. Another parent
suggested only offering academic level courses in
grades 9 and 10.
SOCIAL PLANNING TORONTO | 17
ANALYSIS: CURRENT SYSTEM NARROWS FUTURE OPTIONS AT AN EARLY AGE
Within the current system, many grade 8 students
are choosing their courses without the wisdom or
support needed to ensure they are truly informed
decisions. This sets students on a path that is often
difficult to change.
Students’ experiences in elementary school should
provide the foundation for success in secondary
school. However, as previously mentioned, a
student’s achievement in grade 8 and whether
they are promoted or transferred to high school
are strong indicators of the pathway they’ll take
in grade 9 and throughout high school. Students
who are not supported to overcome barriers and
achieve a high standard of learning may continue
to fall through the cracks and have limited post-
secondary options.
“The students that are struggling in grade eight usually take applied [courses]... not knowing that they can’t go to university if they continue on with the applied through [out high school]... It’s kind of like grouping everyone [and] it starts at middle school.”
-student, grade 11
18 | STILL STREAMED: HOW HIGH IMPACT DECISIONS ARE SHAPING STUDENTS’ FUTURES
The process of streaming students begins in
elementary school. Differential treatment, both
intentional and unintentional, based on student’s
socio-economic backgrounds results in very
different levels of achievement.39 For example,
students are grouped among and within classes
based on their assumed abilities and/or interests.
This can take place within regular schools, or
may be done through placements in special
education programs or specialty programs, such as
alternative schools and French immersion.
This dispartity in treatment and outcomes is the
result of an system in which ability grouping is
used, ostensibly to faciliate effective teaching and
learning, despite mixed evidence.40
In the face of these barriers, our research also
suggests that grade 8 is too early to require
young people to make important life decisions,
including the pathway they will take through high
school. From the age of 13 to the time a student
graduates, young people experience important
social, emotional, and cognitive changes which
shape their interests, needs, and aspirations.
It is during this time that young people are
actively exploring their identity, while also placing
increasing importance on peer relationships.41
Understandably, several students noted a greater
maturity and readiness to make these choices in
their later years of high school.
39 Clandfield et al., 2014.40 Hyland, 2006; Johnston & Wildy, 2016.41 Government of Ontario, 2012.
“At first I thought certain stuff you didn’t really need. Then later on when I was in my senior year I was thinking learning more would be better because you never know what can come at you.”
-student, grade 12
SOCIAL PLANNING TORONTO | 19
Some parents and students argued that more
in-depth support could better prepare students
to make informed decisions about their course
levels. Guidance counsellors would appear to be
the most appropriate source for this. However,
it is unlikely that schools currently have the
capacity to accommodate such efforts. According
to province-wide data from People for Education,
only 11% of schools say that they offer one-on-
one counselling for course selection42 and only
25% of schools with grades 7 and 8 report have a
guidance counsellor, the vast majority of whom
are employed only part-time.43
42 Hamlin & Cameron, 2015.43 Hamlin, Hagen Cameron & Watkins, 2016.
FINDING: FACTORS IN DECISION MAKING ARE COMPLEX
The students described numerous factors which
affected the courses they chose in high school.
Their past experiences, perceptions, values, and
social location, among other circumstances,
influenced these critical decisions.
Classroom Opportunities and Support
For some students, their experiences within the
classroom played a significant role in determining
the courses they took, often in divergent ways. For
example, several students reported taking applied
level courses because they enjoyed hands-on
learning. This was also a common reason that
some students enjoyed science – they appreciated
conducting experiments and applying their
knowledge. For other students, they took applied
courses because they felt they would receive the
individual support they needed. However, some
students believed that if they had more support
“I am still... trying to figure out where I really want to go to be honest. I know it is kind of a daunting task so I am putting it off.”
-student, grade 10
20 | STILL STREAMED: HOW HIGH IMPACT DECISIONS ARE SHAPING STUDENTS’ FUTURES
they could succeed in academic courses. Parents
also expressed a desire for their children to have
more assistance within the classroom.
Interests and Abilities For students, their interest in a subject seemed to
be strongly related to their perceived ability in that
subject. Students tended to express appreciation
for subjects that they did well in. This also
influenced the level at which a student would take
a course: a few students would take their “strong
subject” at the academic level and their “weak
subject” at the applied level.
Future Aspirations Almost all the students said they wanted to attend
college and/or university. Some students, especially
those who were new to Canada, identified college
as a way to qualify for university. Some students
knew exactly what they wanted to study in college
“Just knowing that I was so reckless and carefree [in grades 9 and 10] really bothers me. That’s why I try my best to stay as focused as possible.”
-student, grade 12
“I decided [to take applied] because some courses I needed to learn and get better in. The courses that I look that were academic were like my strong subjects.”
-student, grade 10
or university and chose their courses based on
the prerequisites required for admissions.
Future career goals also affected the subjects
students took. For example, some students
reported taking certain subjects, like auto
mechanics, because they wanted exposure to it
before they pursued it as a career.
Yet, some students admitted that they did not
consider or even realize the long-term impacts of
these decisions when they were choosing their
high school courses for the first time.
SOCIAL PLANNING TORONTO | 21
Meaning of Success Almost every student described success as being
about more than just grades. To them success
was about learning, gaining new knowledge and
skills, and having fun in the process. Students
acknowledged that success was dependent
on the individual; it is knowing you tried your
hardest, which may look different for everyone.
Contrary to this, a number of students did not
take academic level courses, or moved down from
academic to applied, because they didn’t want to
struggle or risk the possibility of failing a course.
Parents associated success for their child as,
firstly, graduating from high school. This was
followed by getting a post-secondary education
and finding full-time employment, while also
doing something that they love.
Peers and Family Very few students said that they consulted with
their peers when deciding which courses to take.
They recognized that every person is different and
each needed to focus on choosing the courses
that best suited their individual circumstance.
While students enjoyed taking courses with their
friends because they could help each other, it was
not a deciding factor.
The amount of influence families had over
these decisions varied considerably among the
students. Some students’ parents simply lent a
listening ear or offered practical advice, others’
parents pressured them towards certain careers,
while other students learned from their siblings’
experiences in high school.
Many parents were approached but could not
be engaged for an interview for this project. The
challenges encountered in this research project
suggest that conventional outreach strategies
may not effective for engaging parents in this
topic.
“You’re either in academic or applied, so applied is the most mainstream route.”
-student, grade 11
22 | STILL STREAMED: HOW HIGH IMPACT DECISIONS ARE SHAPING STUDENTS’ FUTURES
ANALYSIS: STUDENTS ACCEPT PERSONAL RESPONSIBILITY BUT WANT TO BE SUPPORTED
Students’ attitudes and approaches to course
selection and school matters show they tend
to take personal responsibility for their success
in school and the decisions they make. They
understand their achievement to be largely
determined by how much effort they exert. This
mindset indicates that students believe they
play a role in shaping their current and future
circumstances, rather than being the result
of chance or forces external to themselves.
However, they also expressed the desire to
be supported through this process. Many
intersecting and divergent factors affect student
choice and parents and students alike valued
individual assistance and guidance to assist them
in navigating these factors. While some students
opted for lower level courses which would reduce
their risk of failure, if they had reliable support
they may have chosen more advanced courses.
Studies suggests that parental expectations
affect children’s educational ambitions: students
with parents who have high hopes for their
educational future reported to have better
attendance and positive attitudes towards
school.44 The parents we spoke to had positive
expectations for their children that focused on
long-term outcomes. These hopes were likely a
productive influence on their children’s education.
44 Lippman et, al., 2008 as cited in Child Trends: Data Bank, 2015.
Parents are generally the best education advocate
for their children. They know their children’s
strengths and challenges and can use that
knowledge to help identify resources, supports,
and opportunities that will support their children’s
academic success. More research needs to be
done to fully understand the best approaches
to engage parents and provide them with the
knowledge and skills to support their children in
the course selection process. Within the current
system, parents may face barriers to providing this
support, such as limited time, English language
skills, or familiarity with the education system.
FINDING: A PATCHWORK OF INFORMATION
Students accessed information about course
selection from a variety of sources and, perhaps
as a result, have inconsistent understandings of
the different course levels.
Several students from these schools described
the applied pathway as being mainstream,
suggesting that it is the most popular or default
route.
However, when students were asked to describe
the difference between applied and academic
level courses, there seemed to be no sure
definition. Differences in pace, course content,
workload, learning style, and post-secondary
destination were most frequently cited. A few
students could not describe the difference and
claimed it was never explained to them. Several
SOCIAL PLANNING TORONTO | 23
students who had never taken academic level
courses described their perception of academic
courses as being boring, stressful, and/or too
hard.
Most parents reported accessing information
through their child, either through printed
materials sent by the school or through
conversations. If they needed more information,
most parents said they would go directly to a
guidance counsellor or teacher. None of the
parents mentioned accessing course-related
information electronically, either through
the official online portal for selecting courses
(“myBlueprint”), the school’s website, nor by
email.
“Yes, I feel I need more than two sentences of what the course is going to be like. I feel sometimes giving me a description and an example of the material [they’re] going to learn [would] definitely [be] informative.”
-parent
“I hope my child is doing the right thing and I just hope my child is getting guided to the right path and actually getting to learn something.”
-parent
24 | STILL STREAMED: HOW HIGH IMPACT DECISIONS ARE SHAPING STUDENTS’ FUTURES
Proportion of students taking academic programming
51.7% - 66.3%
66.4% - 71.3%
71.4% - 77.3%
77.4% - 87.9%
88.0% - 96.9%
Weston-MountDennis neighbourhood
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Both students and parents expressed the need
for more information and/or one-on-one support
during the course selection process. While nearly
every parent had seen the course selection
sheet, several mentioned that course codes
were confusing and not enough information was
provided about the courses.
For some students, their guidance counsellor
helped them make decisions based on their
individual experiences, while other students
would not even seek help from their guidance
counsellor because they believed they didn’t
need it or they didn’t think that person could be
helpful. The counsellors were sometimes to be
disconnected from the students.
ANALYSIS: DECISIONS ARE NOT ALWAYS INFORMED
Families’ lack of information around course
selection means that these decisions are
sometimes being made without a full awareness
of their repercussions.
Students in this neighbourhood understood
applied to be the mainstream pathway at
their school. As we know, students who are
marginalized and from low-income families are
more likely to be negatively affected by streaming
practices. According to a 2012-13 analysis,
Brown, R. S., Tam, G., & Marmureanu, C. (2015). Toronto District School Board maps representing demographics and achievement by geographic area. (Research Report No. 14/15-11). Toronto, Ontario, Canada: Toronto District School Board Retrieved from http://www.tdsb.on.ca/Portals/research/docs/reports/TDSB%20Maps%20Representing%20Demographics%20and%20Achievement%20by%20Geographic%20Area.pdf
Fig 6 - Proportion of Grade 9 Students in the Academic Program of Study: Grade 9 Cohort of 2012-13
SOCIAL PLANNING TORONTO | 25
Weston-Mount Dennis and surrounding
neighbourhoods have some of the lower
proportions of students in the academic stream
(see Fig. 6). This map shows that between 51.7-
77.3% of students living in these neighbourhoods
take the majority of their grade 9 courses at
the academic level. This is compared to some
neighbourhoods where as many as 87.9-96.9%
of students take the majority of their courses at
the academic level. These trends closely resemble
patterns of income across neighbourhoods.
The high number of students taking applied
courses appears to be leading some students to
believe that applied is the standard route through
high school, even though this track limits future
options.
While the OSS:99 policy states that “academic and
applied courses differ in the balance between
essential concepts and additional material, and
in the balance between theory and application”,
this difference is not clearly or consistently
understood among students or parents.45 The fact
that this very important information is not widely
known among families demonstrates a need in
the system.
While parents did have access to the course
selection sheet, many felt there was not enough
information and course codes were confusing.
Presently, most TDSB students use an online
portal (known as “myBlueprint”) to select their
courses. Through this portal, students have access
to a list of courses offered at their school as well
45 Ontario Ministry of Education and Training, 1999, p. 14
as descriptions of the courses. Since parents did
not mention this portal and further described
their lack of access to this level of information,
they may face a technology barrier to acquiring
this information. This is further reinforced by
parents’ tendency to access information through
their child or directly through school staff (as
opposed to emails or school websites). This
highlights the importance of considering the
lived experiences of the community and ensuring
information is available in multiple formats.
Communication and engagement strategies must
respond to and be reflective of the communities
being served.
Inaccurate information may be the result of
inconsistent patterns of access to information. As
we learned, students have different perceptions
of and interactions with guidance counsellors.
This will inevitably impact the quality and type
of information they receive. In turn, it will also
impact the information parents receive, which
predominantly comes from the child. The need
for one-on-one support expressed by both
parents and students reflects a desired change
in the system to ensure that the course selection
process can respond to and meet the needs of
everyone’s individual circumstance.
26 | STILL STREAMED: HOW HIGH IMPACT DECISIONS ARE SHAPING STUDENTS’ FUTURES
FINDING: PLACEMENT REFLECTS PAST PERFORMANCE AND MAY RESTRICT FUTURE GROWTH
Most students believed placement in applied or
academic level courses is tied to achievement
levels. For this reason, it was generally assumed
if a student put in enough effort and improved
their grades, they could move up to academic
from applied. However, for the few who
actively explored making an upward transition,
administrative requirements prevented or
deterred them. This could include taking a
transfer course during the summer, at another
school, or online, or repeating the course with
students of a younger age. Additionally, some
of the students mentioned that it is easier to
transition from applied to academic early on in
their high school career. They suggested that
after grade 10, students are on a path that is
difficult to change.
“I have come to the understanding that applied gives you only one opportunity. In applied your plan is to go to college. [In] academic, university or college is an option... In academic you can work your way down but in applied you can’t work your way up.”
-parent
SOCIAL PLANNING TORONTO | 27
“I’m going to stay in applied because it’s too hard to switch over to academic.”
-student, grade 11
On the other hand, students believed it was quite
simple to move down from academic to applied.
As one student commented, “you just tell your
guidance counsellor [that] you can’t handle it.”
Some students suggested that it should not be so
easy.
A few students said that they wanted to take
academic courses in grade 9 but received a
different recommendation or were pressured to
take applied courses by their guidance counsellor
or teacher.
Both students and parents felt that the treatment
of students varied between pathways, saying that
teachers have higher expectations for students
in the academic pathway and/or offer them more
activities (ex. field trips). Similarly, students also
felt there was differential treatment between
the general student population and those in
special programs, including the International
Baccalaureate, Africentric, and R.U.S.H programs.
“I didn’t actually choose the courses myself. In middle school, I wanted to do academic but my teacher put down applied.”
-student, grade 12
28 | STILL STREAMED: HOW HIGH IMPACT DECISIONS ARE SHAPING STUDENTS’ FUTURES
ANALYSIS: POLICY IS NOT REALITY
Even though the Ministry of Education does
not provide criteria for determining whether a
student should take applied or academic level
courses, qualitative evidence from our research
suggests that this is largely determined by
students’ achievement levels and grades. Again,
this is reiterated by provincial research from
People for Education (2014) which found “the
majority of principals say that students’ academic
performance is the most common factor taken
into account in making recommendations”.46
While current achievement levels are important to
consider, these decisions should include a holistic
assessment which takes into account students’
potential, interests, and future aspirations.
Regardless of the recommendation made by a
teacher or guidance counsellor, course choices
are ultimately up to the students and their
parents. This means that students, with the
support of their parents, can enrol in academic
level courses despite receiving a different
recommendation. Some of our conversations
suggest that this, however, may not be common
knowledge or may be difficult to enforce. This
may be especially true in communities where
families face marginalization and engagement
barriers.
46 P.447 Ontario Ministry of Education and Training, 1999, p. 14, emphasis added.48 Ontario Ministry of Education and Training, 1999, p. 28.49 People for Education, n.d.
Ministry policy states that “students who are
successful in any academic or applied Grade 9
course will have the opportunity to enter either
the academic or applied course in the same
subject in Grade 10”.47 The policy later adds that
under these circumstances the “student will be
strongly encouraged to successfully complete
additional course work of up to 30 hours …. in
summer school or in a program outside the
regular school hours or during the school day”.48
This means that students are usually required
to take a transfer course. Very few schools offer
transfer courses during the regular school day,
so students may have to repeat the subject, or
take an online or summer school course.49 This
process is even more challenging as students
progress through high school and transfer credits
are required for all changes.
While students and parents are advised that it
is possible to switch from applied to academic,
the administrative burden of upgrading credits
is a meaningful obstacle and prevents some
students from pursuing their desired path. Since
our findings indicate that the current system
seems unable to provide enough flexibility to
ensure all students can move between pathways,
families need clear and accurate information
that describes the different pathways and what is
required to change pathways.
SOCIAL PLANNING TORONTO | 29
Conversely, the ease with which students can move to a lower pathway is an area of concern. Both
transitions can have different yet substantial impacts on the current and future success of a student and
therefore should be given ample attention and consideration.
Although the current structure for secondary school courses was developed to allow students flexibility
and “select an appropriate combination of academic, applied, and open courses,”50 students tend to take
the majority of their courses at the same level. More so, patterns of enrollment closely resemble the old
system of advanced (academic), general (applied) and basic (essentials).51 Despite policy stating otherwise,
students continue to be grouped among structured pathways which are difficult to alter and which
significantly disadvantages low-income and marginalized students.
50 Ontario Ministry of Education and Training, 1999, p. 19.51 Brown, Newton, Tam & Parekh, 2015.
“Every day when we would have his class after [it was] done he would call me in for a one on one and then talk about how I’m doing in school and everything like that, and tell me to stay up on my levels to be the best I can be.”
-student, grade 10
“I know it takes some practice and time to be great at [something] but the kind of support that I would want is like my teacher not say “if you don’t do that, you are going to fail.” I don’t want to hear that. I want to hear “you did this bad? Ok practice, you could do better.”
-student, grade 11
30 | STILL STREAMED: HOW HIGH IMPACT DECISIONS ARE SHAPING STUDENTS’ FUTURES
FINDING: ENCOURAGEMENT AND ONE-ON-ONE SUPPORT MAKES A DIFFERENCE
Most students spoke about particular teachers at
their school as playing an important role in their
success. When students were asked about what
makes a teacher stand out, they talked about their
personal relationship which was built on mutual
respect. Their teachers taught valuable life lessons
and took the time to understand the student’s
personal strengths and weaknesses. Notably,
these teachers often altered their teaching style to
support the student and would offer one-on-one
instruction and assistance.
When students sought the advice of a teacher to
help their course selection, it was almost always
informal in nature and involved a teacher they had
a personal relationship with. Students also spoke
positively about the teachers that pushed them
to achieve their potential and supported them in
ways that students felt were above and beyond
their job description.
Beyond the classroom, several students talked
about the importance of taking trips to post-
secondary institutions, including Humber College,
Ryerson University, and Harvard University. These
trips shaped their future ambitions and made post-
secondary education seem within reach.
“I wish someone told me that I was smarter than I thought I was [be]cause I really thought I was a dumb student. Then when I started to work hard in school... I realized that I really wasn’t dumb at all... The fact that I once thought that I was dumb, that in [and of] itself is an issue.”
-student, grade 12
SOCIAL PLANNING TORONTO | 31
ANALYSIS: PROVEN BEST PRACTICES NEED TO BE SYSTEMATIZED
Rather than speaking to a parent or guidance
counsellor, many students spoke to a trusted
teacher about their course selection. While
teachers play important roles in supporting,
fostering, and guiding young people, students
suggested their role in course selection is informal
and dependent on the personal relationship
between the two. Consequently, this may not
be a reliable tool for ensuring effective course
selection across the system unless teachers are
supported, trained, and allocated time specifically
for this purpose.
Our conversations with students reflect other
research that shows teacher expectations play a
critical role in students’ achievement.52 Croninger
& Lee (2001) found students experiencing
high levels of motivation, trust, support, and
expectations from teachers experience higher
self-esteem and are more likely to succeed in
school. Similarly, the students we interviewed
appreciated teachers who developed personal
relationships with them and pushed them to
do their best. Given the appropriate amount of
reassurance and effort-based praise students can
overcome barriers that sometimes prevent them
from achieving their potential.
52 Segedin, 2012; Croninger & Lee, 2001.53 San Vicente, Sultana & Seck, 2015.
Some education reformers and advocates have
been adopting these practices through a “growth
mindset” framework focused on the ability of
young people to improve on past performance
and increase their abilities given support and
effort.53
As we learned, some students were disinclined to
seek the help of a guidance counsellor (see page
24). It can be reasonably expected that not every
student will take it upon themselves to seek the
advice of a guidance counsellor. For this reason,
more effort needs to be made to reach out to and
engage every student. Formal processes should
be used to systematize relationships between
students and the guidance department. Whenever
possible families should also be included in this
process. Similarly, initiatives such as trips to
post-secondary institutions should continue to be
consistently offered in communities where fewer
students apply for and attend post-secondary
education.
32 | STILL STREAMED: HOW HIGH IMPACT DECISIONS ARE SHAPING STUDENTS’ FUTURES
CONCLUSION
Despite provincial claims that streaming has
been abolished, quantitative data from the TDSB
demonstrates that students are organized into
structured pathways which significantly impact
their access to post-secondary and career
opportunities. This is especially detrimental to low-
income and marginalized students who are over-
represented in lower level courses.
Students are also pressed to make key life
decisions too early in their academic careers.
Without the maturity and support to fully grasp
the weight of these decisions, these students
are unknowingly following a path which inhibits
them from reaching their full potential. The
current system presents a number of hurdles
that makes revising these decisions and changing
one’s pathway difficult. This all happens within an
education system which insists on being “focused
on ensuring that no child or youth will have
anything in the way to stop them from reaching
their potential”.54
So long as this structure is in place, families
need access to information and support
in a systematized and reliable manner. As
demonstrated by qualitative data from this project,
a patchwork of information leaves some students
making decisions in dark.
54 Ontario Ministry of Education, 2014, para. 3.
“I believe the education system is influenced by society and society is influenced by the government.... Like we’re black, we should be taking these low worker jobs and these little fast food jobs and these little cheap paying jobs, and then the white man should be like the big business man with the big house and the big car, the beautiful wife and like you know, they’re just setting us up for that.”
-student, grade 11
SOCIAL PLANNING TORONTO | 33
RECOMMENDATIONS
While this research is based on data rooted in the Toronto District School Board, pathways
through high school are provincially mandated and learnings from this project may be
applied by local school boards as well as the Ministry of Education.
1. Make de-streaming policies currently in place more effective. Initiate a review the practice
of streaming and develop a plan to alter the process to address the issues identified in this
report. This should specifically include delaying any selection of education pathways as late
as possible.
2. Facilitate and resource de-streaming efforts, including expanding successful pilots
that have raised student achievement levels and increased success for students from
marginalized and low-income communities.
3. Provide more flexibility and support for students who want to move up streams, including
more accessible remedial education opportunities.
4. Increase transparency around pathways, what is required to move between pathways,
and the future options available with each pathway.
5. Increase exposure of students (regardless of pathway) to guidance counsellors, career
planning resources, enrichment activities, and a wide range of post-secondary opportunities
using systematized and responsive approaches.
6. Increase efforts to raise awareness about the importance of course selection and to
inform parents about available choices, targeting community groups over-represented in the
lower streams.
7. Investigate more effective strategies for engaging parents in the course selection process.
8. Through professional development and other initiatives, support teachers in engaging
students in supportive, trusting relationships, growth oriented guidance and expectations
that encourage development and success.
9. Provide effective equity-specific training for school staff, including administrators,
guidance counsellors and teachers, which includes awareness of barriers to growth and
success for students in specific populations.
34 | STILL STREAMED: HOW HIGH IMPACT DECISIONS ARE SHAPING STUDENTS’ FUTURES
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